1944 Football League War Cup South final explained

1944 Football League
War Cup South Final
Event:1944 Football League War Cup
Team1:Chelsea
Team1score:1
Team2:Charlton Athletic
Team2score:3
Date:15 April 1944
City:London
Attendance:85,000

The 1944 Football League War Cup South Final was the final of the southern section of Football League War Cup, an unofficial cup competition held in England during the Second World War as a replacement for the suspended FA Cup. The match took place at Wembley Stadium on 15 April 1944 and was won by Charlton Athletic, who beat Chelsea 3–1. Charlton later contested a play-off against the winners of the equivalent North final, Aston Villa.

Match summary

Chelsea took an early lead with a penalty from Joe Payne. Charlton equalised through Charlie Revell and took the lead on 36 minutes when a defensive mix-up enabled Don Welsh to score. Revell scored Charlton's third a minute later to put the game beyond Chelsea's reach. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Commander of the Allied forces, presented the cup to victorious captain Welsh.[1] The match produced a record gate of £26,000, of which £12,000 was recouped by the Government in Entertainment Tax.[2]

Match details

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1 Vic Woodley
2 George Hardwick
3 Eric Westwood
4 William Russell
5 John Harris
6 Dick Foss
7 Llew Ashcroft
8 Jimmy Bowie
9 Joe Payne
10 Willie Fagan
11 Charlie Mitten
Manager:
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1 Sam Bartram
2 John Shreeve
3 Joe Jobling
4 George Smith
5 Jackie Oakes
6 Allenby Chilton
7 George Robinson
8 Sailor Brown
9 Charlie Revell
10 Don Welsh
11 Chris Duffy
Manager:
Jimmy Seed

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Charlton at Wembley: A look at history. cafc.co.uk. 25 January 2022.
  2. Web site: 1944 and 1945 Football League South Cup finals. chelseafc.com. 25 January 2022.